One month deadline for Fiji Times
BY NICKY PARK
Relevant offers
South Pacific
News Ltd has one month to sell or close its local paper in Fiji, a spokeswoman for the country's interim government says.
The deadline for parties interested in purchasing the Fiji Times closed on Thursday, three months after self-appointed Prime Minister Commodore Frank Bainimarama decreed that the newspaper - owned by Rupert Murdoch's Australian arm - must be 90 per cent locally owned.
"I know that there are several local companies that have expressed an interest in the purchase," Fiji's permanent secretary for information, Sharon Smith-Johns, told AAP on Friday.
"It should be local investment in newspapers and it should be local ownership," the Australian-born spokeswoman for the government said.
"Having local-owned media is better for the country because the publishers tend to have a much greater understanding of the issues in Fiji."
News Ltd recruited PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC) to handle the sale.
"Whilst I cannot give any details I can say that the sale process is proceeding with interested parties," PWC senior partner Jenny Seeto told the Fiji Times.
"PricewaterhouseCoopers will now evaluate the offers and any additional information about the business that is required will be provided to interested parties."
Ms Seeto said progress was being made, but she wasn't sure how long it would take to seal the deal.
"News Ltd is committed to quickly concluding a sale with one of the interested parties," she said.
The paper's publisher, Anne Fussell, was not making any comment about the sale and attempts to contact News Ltd on Friday were unsuccessful.
Commodore Bainimarama, who is also the nation's military leader, has been tightening controls on the media since he overthrew the elected government in a bloodless coup in 2006.
Last year, Commodore Bainimarama sent censors into newsrooms to prevent "negative" stories being reported after sacking the judiciary and voiding the constitution.
Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith condemned the decree as an assault on freedom of speech and said it would deter investment in Fiji.
- AAP
Sponsored links
272 confirmed dead in Honduras jail fire
Olympics trigger record $815,000 rent for home
Mass killer shouts 'Kim Kardashian, will you marry me?'
Iran's nuke advances deepen standoff with West
Prosecutors want five-year Berlusconi jail term
Tuning in to TV-watching pooches
Syria's Assad offers vote, tanks shell rebel areas
Human and humanoid robot shake hands in space first
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Possible bomb link in Thai, India attacks
Greece battles to salvage bailout package
Govt says asset sales will cut debt
China 'will see Crafar ruling as racist'
Fallen property king arrested in Auckland raids
Mass killer shouts 'Kim Kardashian, will you marry me?'
From TV to a tent: Family of eight evicted
272 confirmed dead in Honduras jail fire
Mallard sells festival tickets online at profit
Olympics trigger record $815,000 rent for home
Debt crisis may stymie surplus by 2014
Electronic cigarette explodes in man's mouth
Another near-death Laos tube ride
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
From TV to a tent: Family of eight evicted
Star claims Home and Away racism
Robyn Malcolm lays it all bare
Fallen property king arrested in Auckland raids
Pub owners give up, open kindergarten
Mallard sells festival tickets online at profit
Mallard sells festival tickets online at profit
Cyclist: Don't fine us, fix the road
Mallard sells festival tickets online at profit
Should you take your groom's name?
Can Paris Hilton save her image?